Who

Guitar Hero

When we discuss the weblog with our friends, psu and I have a running joke.
It’s something along the lines of “Hey, man. We can gripe for 500 words about
anything.”

I haven’t been griping much lately, because I’ve been too busy playing Guitar
Hero.

Let me just get this out of the way: yes, Guitar Hero really is that good.
If you own a Playstation 2, and you haven’t yet picked up this game, you
should put down the computer, drive to your local game store, and buy it.
Today. Right now. You’ll thank me. It might be the best $70 you’ll spend this
year. I didn’t expect to have this reaction to the game. At its heart,
Guitar Hero is “just another rhythm game,” like Samba de Amigo, or Dance
Dance Revolution. I find most of these games to be “cute,” but not terribly
compelling. Guitar Hero is compelling.

The centerpiece of the game is the custom controller, shaped like a small
guitar (or a large ukelele). Along the neck of the guitar are five colored
buttons (“fret buttons”) that you hold to choose what notes will be played. On
the body is a single “strumming” button that can be moved up or down. Also on
the body is a whammy bar that modulates the note being played.

The actual game is straightforward: notes fall toward you, and you need to
hold the correct fret button (or buttons) and “strum” at the right time. Hit
all the notes and the audience will cheer more and your score will go up. Miss
enough notes, and you’ll get booed off the stage. In addition to the standard
controls, inside the guitar is a tilt sensor. At certain times during the
game, you can lift the neck of the guitar up to the ceiling, and the audience
will go wild and your score is multiplied.

Where the game shines is in its feedback loop. The guitar soundtrack is fairly
tightly coupled to the buttons you are hitting. If you miss a button (or hit
the wrong one), the guitar track will cut out until you get the next note
right. The psychological impact of this can’t really be overstated. While
playing the game, my main motivation isn’t explicitly to get a high score, but
to just keep the song sounding good.

The other aspect of the game is that the “easy” level really isn’t. The first
levels of most rhythm games tend to be insultingly easy. Guitar Hero starts
off at a respectable pace, and I haven’t yet seen someone who got a perfect
score on their first runthrough of any given song, even on the easiest level.

The combined effect of these two factors – the feedback loop, and the
difficulty level – is that Guitar Hero manages to succesfully deliver the
sustained illusion that you know how to play guitar, even though you don’t.
On a rational level, I know that even the simplest guitar licks are beyond my
abilities. But when I make a respectable showing on Franz Ferdinand’s “Take Me
Out,” on Hard, that is forgotten. The lizard part of my brain,
Thog, tells the rational
part to shut up and go drink more stupid chamomile tea. Thog know how to play
guitar. Thog can rock out.

Reinforcing this is the fact that a number of semi-real guitar principles
apply to playing the custom controller. You don’t have to release a lower fret
when playing a higher fret. You can hammer
on and pull
off notes. The side-effect of playing
this game is that you will suddenly have more respect for real guitarists,
when you realize how hard it is to “play” difficult songs with a mere five
buttons and one “string.”

The stiff difficulty of the game also allows you to improve with surprising
rapidity. When I first started playing, I peeked at a few songs on “Expert”
level, and they seemed like some sort of cruel joke. Now, although still far
out of my reach – I’m working my way through the “Medium” level, with the
occasional foray into “Hard” – they just look difficult, but not actually
impossible.

The selection of music in the game is fairly varied. It’s obviously slanted
towards arena rock and heavy metal. There are 30 covers of songs by bands
you’ve actually heard of. Out of these 30 songs, I’d say I actually like
perhaps 7. Even though I don’t like the other 23, they still “work” in the
context of a guitar game. And that’s OK – I can still like playing “Bark at
the Moon_ even if I don’t like listening to it. You can find a complete track
listing here, along with samples. There
are also 17 (unlockable) tracks by independent bands that range from atrocious
to nifty.

I guess I should be glad, really, that this isn’t an Xbox game, because I’m
pretty sure that if I could pay to download more songs on Xbox Live, I’d be
broke right about now.

A lot of work went in to the motion-capture for the avatars in your virtual
band, but as in all games of this type, it’s sort of lost on the person
playing the game. At least when I play, my eyes are glued firmly to the notes
coming at me. The caricature rockers are fun, but will mostly be enjoyed by
spectators, not players.

You simply can’t get an idea of the game from hearing me talk about it,
although you can sort of get the gist from watching videos of people playing. In
the end, you simply need to trust me on this: stop what you’re doing, and go
get the game, and you will be a happier person. You will feel stupid walking
through Best Buy holding a huge box with a guitar and flames on it. If, like
me, you’re old, you’ll feel stupid as teenage girls laugh at you on the
checkout line. If you live with someone, you will feel stupid when you walk in
the house and explain what it is you just purchased. And then the moment you
actually start playing your first round, you will forget all of that and feel
smarter than all of the people who are having less fun than you because
they’re doing something boring and stupid, while you get to play Guitar
Hero.